Step A: Use the JEL subject classification system and the EconLit Thesaurus to identify subject terms. Perform a search in EconLit for these as descriptors.
Step B: Use the Index of Journal Titles in EconLit to perform a search for Journal of Economic Perspectives OR Journal of Economic Literature
Step C: Use the History search in EconLit to combine the first two searches.
Step D: Browse the results for relevant review/survey articles.
With review articles, or theoretical or empirical articles you've already found, search the Social Sciences Citation Index for other articles that cite them. Pay close attention, also, to possible data sources.
When you search for articles, don't rely strictly on keyword searches.
Authors: After identifying important articles in your area, search for more articles by those authors.
Descriptors: Also, search in databases like EconLit for an article you've already read. Look at the descriptors used by the database to describe it. Perform new searches based on those descriptors.
Organizations: Organizations publish reports, too. If you identify a relevant organization, like the Mediamark (a company that surveys the public), for example, search for that organization as an author.
Questions? Contact reference@carleton.edu
Powered by Springshare.